Ship Registration and Brexit
Ship Registration and Brexit
Formal notice of the United Kingdom’s intention to leave the European Union was given on 29 March 20172. The completion of this process, or Brexit in common parlance, will take place on the second anniversary of that event in March 2019, subject to a possible transitional period of around two more years, the terms and extent of which have yet to be agreed. The objective is to restore to the United Kingdom (UK) exclusive competence for law making and regulation that was ceded exclusively or jointly to European bodies when the UK joined the then European Economic Community (EEC)3 in 1973. The primacy of EU law over UK domestic law, not in itself legally controversial, could nonetheless have far-reaching effects, as demonstrated by the decisions of the European Court of Justice in the Factortame cases that will be discussed in Part II of this paper4.
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Coles, Richard
e60681c9-92e5-463c-a6fe-6c6c60c4f6a0
Serdy, Andrew
0b9326c4-8a5a-468f-9ca8-7368ccb07663
2019
Coles, Richard
e60681c9-92e5-463c-a6fe-6c6c60c4f6a0
Serdy, Andrew
0b9326c4-8a5a-468f-9ca8-7368ccb07663
Coles, Richard and Serdy, Andrew
(2019)
Ship Registration and Brexit.
Tulane Maritime Law Journal, 43 (2), .
Abstract
Formal notice of the United Kingdom’s intention to leave the European Union was given on 29 March 20172. The completion of this process, or Brexit in common parlance, will take place on the second anniversary of that event in March 2019, subject to a possible transitional period of around two more years, the terms and extent of which have yet to be agreed. The objective is to restore to the United Kingdom (UK) exclusive competence for law making and regulation that was ceded exclusively or jointly to European bodies when the UK joined the then European Economic Community (EEC)3 in 1973. The primacy of EU law over UK domestic law, not in itself legally controversial, could nonetheless have far-reaching effects, as demonstrated by the decisions of the European Court of Justice in the Factortame cases that will be discussed in Part II of this paper4.
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 December 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 October 2019
Published date: 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 431253
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/431253
ISSN: 1048-3748
PURE UUID: 1e27baec-e5a5-4923-80b7-3179f56061ad
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Date deposited: 28 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:46
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Author:
Richard Coles
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